The CHIPS Act Is Corporate Welfare Disguised as Industrial Policy
If you believe that moving most of our chip production onshore is good for national security, you should labor for regulatory reforms rather than subsidies.

Industrial policy is making a comeback. For those of you under the age of 50, this is just another term for corporate welfare—a lovely name for the unlovely practice of a government granting subsidies, protective tariffs, and other privileges to politically influential industries or companies. It's often done in the name of some lofty goal such as strengthening national security or ensuring that America is a leader in the "industries of the future." But the outcome is always the same: wasteful, unfair, unsuccessful, and unjustified. Oh, and it invariably grows the budget deficit.
The latest form of industrial policy is Congress's CHIPS Act of 2022, a bill meant to subsidize the semiconductor industry by channeling taxpayer money to build up domestic production capacity and combat feared Chinese computer-chip supremacy.
This chapter began with the disruption caused by lockdowns to global supply chains. Unsurprisingly, that led to a series of semiconductor shortages aggravated by a surge in demand for automobiles. Automakers wrongly assumed that the original drop in demand would persist, canceled orders for semiconductors, and then could not keep up with the buying public.
Now, Congress is responding to this temporary chip shortage with $52 billion in subsidies and $24 billion in tax credits mostly directed at semiconductor industry beggars.
Never mind that chip firms have already expanded production without subsidies. In fact, two years into negotiating this bill, it's obvious that it has little to do with any alleged structural deficiencies in the semiconductor market. For instance, the initial chip subsidy proposal had a $16 billion price tag. Since then, the industry has announced its own investments totaling over $800 billion, with $80 billion committed for near-term investment in U.S.-based fabrication facilities. Yet somehow, the bill more than tripled in price to target a problem that's already being solved.
What about the argument that China is subsidizing its chip producers and thus threatening our technological leadership? Yes, China subsidizes its chip industry, but this doesn't guarantee their subsidies will work. If U.S. politicians could for a moment stop treating every Chinese action as a threat, they would see that the Chinese semiconductor industry is both quantitatively and qualitatively weak. In fact, many of the companies subsidized would go under without the government's help. That's hardly the sign of a vibrant industry. These subsidies are more like life support than super-vitamins.
China not only imports somewhere around 84 percent of its chips, but its civilian sector is dominated by those made in America. Chinese-made chips are used mostly by the military; these chips are absent from nearly all the high-value industry segments. In other words, Beijing's efforts to create a powerful chip industry have failed for two decades. We can safely assume that this failure will continue for decades to come.
By contrast, the U.S. chip industry is extremely profitable. These firms invest massive amounts of money in research and development—18 times the dollar amount of their Chinese-subsidized competitors. The result, as Stevens Institute of Technology professor George Calhoun writes, is that if the semiconductor industry "is de-constructed into its key segments, the picture is clear. There is no significant capacity or capability problem for the U.S., which is dominant in every segment of the industry" except one.
Furthermore, as my colleagues Weifeng Zhong and Christine McDaniel point out in a recent op-ed, believing that these subsidies will promote our national security by helping companies relocate production to the United States is rooted in faith rather than facts. Noting that "only 1 in 8 interventions change a company's location choice," they write:
Any resulting new operations would still face deep-rooted issues hindering American manufacturing. Large-scale environmental assessments will be required, but over the years, the costs and delays have become excessive. Recent trends promoting or requiring unionized workers for federal contracts, combined with the current labor shortage, will hinder chipmakers' ability to find talent and could exacerbate the cost of domestic production.
In other words, if you believe that moving most of our chip production onshore is important for national security reasons, you should labor for regulatory reforms rather than subsidies.
It's easy for politicians to talk about industrial policy in terms of sweeping national goals. But in the real world, what these policies do is add to our deficit, fuel more inflation, waste resources, breed unfairness, and hinder growth.
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Here I thought it was an entire policy about Eric Estrada
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If you believe that moving most of our chip production onshore is good for national security, you should labor for regulatory reforms rather than subsidies.
Who the fuck are you even talking to? I can't imagine a commenter here arguing we need more subsidies for producing electronics.
You're not thinking. If Trump argued for subsidies then most of the commentariat would say Reason has TDS for opposing them. Because true libertarians are Trump Republicans.
De Rugy is talking to readers of Reason, which include many who don't subscribe, are not self-described libertarians, but see a link from some other site and come here to get her, or another, viewpoint. Further, where else are you going to get the viewpoint, that there are other ways than subsidies, to get our chip plants back in the USA??? Not from the beholden to government MSM.
Thank you Veronique for showing libertarian solutions to problems, the MSM and government don't want you to see.
Auto makers and other industries could reduce chip usage and many of their customers would support this improvement: by removing domestic spying technology from autos and appliances.
Many consumers hate this invasive technology and Congress hasn’t provided sufficient protection from 4th Amendment violations. Government agencies can bypass 4th Amendment legal restraints simply by purchasing our private information from third parties.
Manufacturers could reduce chip usage simply by listening to their customers.
Or you can always ride a bike if you are that paranoid because without modern electronics that is what a car would look like.
"Auto makers and other industries could reduce chip usage"
You are correct, and we can remove the chips that enhance functions like anti-lock brakes, fuel efficiency, automatic reports of accidents (in case you can't call, which will be the case if you don't have chips in your phone, and you don't have a two-way radio using vacuum tubes instead of chips). Why not go back to hand cranked engines? No battery, chips or starter motors needed for that either.
But your idea is right in line with Biden's ideas, about people living a less prosperous life.
National Socialism (i.e. Nazism) creates "outcomes that are always the same: wasteful, unfair, unsuccessful, and unjustified. Oh, and it invariably grows the budget deficit."...
Articles would be so much shorter if they'd just call it by what it is...
Passing the chips act took a few months. Regulatory reform will take 50 years at least, if it ever happens.
And Reason doesn’t want regulatory reform anyway. If Reason wanted regulatory reform, they'd support leaders who repeal regulations like Trump. But Reason writers were lining up against Trump. Watch them do the same thing for DeSantis and others. They’ll support the biggest government candidates again in 2022 and 2024.
As a self-described libertarian, and 40+ year subscriber to Reason (though recently went to digital subscription) I sadly agree. IMHO, Trump was the most libertarian president in my lifetime (even more so than Reagan). The political class hated him for that, and the constant negative articles about alleged "mean tweets" led to Lincoln's first two observations when he said "“You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can not fool all of the people all of the time.”
It seems the staff forgot that performative acts of conformity should be resisted, in preference to reason and questioning of authority.
This would be good analysis if military strategy and corporate financial statements were the same thing.
The CCP was the enemy, a threat when they were full-on communist. Then they let the farms, and eventually the rest of the country go capitalist, more so that the US Empire. Now, we buy from them, depend on them, like they used to do from us. And we are told they are a bigger threat than ever??? What the hell is going on?
Where would the world be without Chinese PVs, BEVS, chips, raw materials, refining? In the majority of the 20th century the USA dominated many, many industries, e.g., autos, steel. Did this put the world at risk? Did it discourage competition or encourage it? I agree, "It's difficult to assess the effectiveness of policies...". But, why? Because bureaucrats can't manage the economy. The only system that has ever created peace/prosperity is capitalism. Capitalism requires a free market, meaning free from red tape, politics as usual. But, every nation is socialistic, interventionist, a constant drag on innovation. Some are much worse than others. To test the need for freedom, look at places where economic freedom is less, and you will find a direct correlation with general prosperity. In the 19th century, the only country that enjoyed a pro-capitalist economy, went from a 3rd world status to richest, freest, most productive, happiest bacon of freedom for immigration. How about learning from history? It's only logical.
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